Lightfastness is a property of a colourant such as dye or pigment that describes its resistance to fading when exposed to light. Dyes and pigments are used for example for dyeing of , or other materials and manufacturing or .
The bleaching of the color is caused by the impact of ultraviolet radiation in the chemical structure of the giving the color of the subject. The part of a molecule responsible for its color is called the chromophore.
Light encountering a painted surface can either alter or break the of the pigment, causing the colors to bleach or change in a process known as photodegradation. Materials that resist this effect are said to be lightfast. The electromagnetic spectrum of the sun contains from gamma waves to radio waves. The high energy of ultraviolet radiation in particular accelerates the fading of the dye.
The photon energy of Ultraviolet A-radiation which is not absorbed by atmospheric ozone exceeds the dissociation energy of the carbon-carbon single bond, resulting in the bond cleavage of the bond and fading of the color. Inorganic colourants are considered to be more lightfast than organic matter colourants. Black colourants are usually considered the most lightfast.
Lightfastness is measured by exposing a sample to a lightsource for a predefined period of time and then comparing it to an unexposed sample.
When a photon reacts with a molecule acting as colourant, the molecule is excited state from the ground state to an excited state. The excited molecule is highly reactive and unstable. During the quenching of the molecule from excited state to ground state, atmospheric triplet oxygen reacts with the colourant molecule to form singlet oxygen and superoxide oxygen radical. The oxygen atom and the superoxide radical resulting from the reaction are both highly reactive and capable of destroying the colourants.
The most well known scales measuring the lightfastness are the Blue Wool Scale, Grey scale and the scale defined by ASTM (American Standard Test Measure).
The actual lightfastness is dependent on the strength of the radiation of the sun, so lightfastness is relative to geographic location, season, and exposure direction. The following table is listing suggestive relations of the lightfastness ratings on different measure scales and the relation relative to time in direct sunlight and normal conditions of display: away from a window, under indirect sunlight and properly framed behind a UV protective glass.
In screen printing, the particle size of the pigment is not the limiting factor. Thus it is the preferred printing method for printing jobs requiring extreme lightfastness. The thickness of the ink layer affects the lightfastness by the amount of pigment laid on the substrate. The ink layer printed by screen printing is thicker than that printed by offset printing. In other words, it contains more pigment per area. This leads to better lightfastness even though the printing ink used in both methods would be based on the same pigment.
When mixing printing inks, the ink with the weaker lightfastness defines the lightfastness of the whole mixed color. The fading of one of the pigments leads to a tone shift towards the component with better lightfastness. If it is required that there will be something visible from the printing, even though its dominant pigment would fade, then a small amount of pigment with excellent lightfastness can be mixed with it.
Chemical processes
Photolysis
Photo-oxidation
Photoreduction
Photosensitization
Phototendering
Standards and measure scales
less than 2 years 2–15 years 2–4 weeks 15–50 years 4–5 months 50–100 years over 100 years over 1.5 years
Test procedure
In graphical industry
See also
External links
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